Persephin (PSP)
Persephin is a disulfide-linked homodimer neurotrophic factor structurally related to GDNF, Artemin, and Neurturin. These proteins belong to the cysteine-knot family of growth factors that assume stable dimeric structures. Persephin signals through a multicomponent receptor system, composed of RET and one of four GFRα (α1-α4) receptors. The GFRα4 was first identified in chicken and was later shown to be the preferential binding subunit for Persephin. Persephin promotes the survival of ventral midbrain dompaminergic neurons and motor neurons after sciatic nerve oxotomy, and like GNDF, promotes ureteric bud branching. However, in contrast to GDNF and Neurturin, Persephin does not support survival of peripheral neurons. Recombinant murine Persephin is a disulfide-linked homodimer, composed of two 10.3 kDa polypeptide chains (96 total amino acid residues) . Each chain contains seven conserved cysteine residues, one of which (Cys 63) is used for inter-chain disulfide bridging and the others are involved in intramolecular ring formation known as the cysteine knot configuration.
Product Specifications
Synonyms
Bpifa2; Psp; Bpifa2e
NCBI Gene ID
19194
UniProt
O70300
Accession Number
NP_032980.2
Accession Number mRNA
NM_008954
Chromosomal Location
2 H1; 2 88.0 cM
Reactivity
Mouse
Cross Reactivity
Human
Sequence
ALAGSCRLWS LTLPVAELGL GYASEEKVIF RYCAGSCPQE ARTQHSLVLA RLRGRGRAHG RPCCQPTSYA DVTFLDDQHH WQQLPQLSAA ACGCGG
Endotoxin
< 0.1 ng/µg of protein (< 1EU/µg)
Purity
> 90% by SDS-PAGE & HPLC analyses
Bioactivity
Length
96
Form
Lyophilized
Molecular Weight
10.3 kDa
Host or Source
E. coli
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